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Summary

The Dagstuhl Seminar 17372 "Cybersafety in Modern Online Social Networks" was a short two and a half day seminar, which took place September 10th-13th, 2017.
Its main goal was to bring together researchers from various research areas related to cyberfraud and cybersafety in online social network, and to inspire them to exchange results, practical requirements, and ethical/legal implications related to user-driven research.

First Day. The seminar started with a short self-introduction of all the participants, then, we had an initial brainstorming session to identify main topics of interest, various aspects involved in them, and a balance in terms of interdisciplinary representation.
Specifically, we focused on scams happening in online social network and hate speech, while paying special attention to the protection of minors.
The aspects discussed were related to algorithmic, user, understanding/modeling, ethical, and privacy aspects of working in this line of research.

The brainstorming session concluded with the discussion of the following tangible research directions:

We should work on detection, prevention, and mitigation of hate speech.

All solutions should be in accordance of regulations.

We should pay particular attention to false positives, as users can easily lose their trust in the platform.

We should take into consideration the role of proxies, which act as biases on the data.

We should focus on counter-terrorism research that aims to distinguish vulnerable population in order to recruit them for propaganda purposes.

We then had four long talks throughout the day.
The first speaker, Jeremy Blackburn (University of Alabama at Birmingham, US), described his work on cyberbullying and hate speech that includes studying behavior on video games as well as fringe Web communities like 4chan.
The second speaker, Filippo Menczer (Indiana University -- Bloomington, US) ,presented how misinformation is spread on Twitter.
Specifically, he presented how false information as well as the respective fact-checking efforts are diffused on the Twitter network.
The third speaker, Gianluca Stringhini (University College London, GB) presented his work on cyberfraud and scams, focusing on deceptive techniques employed by malicious users in order to scam benign users on online dating sites.
The last speaker of the first day was Awais Rashid (Lancaster University, GB), who described his work related to child sex offenders and how he coordinated with Police bodies in order to undertake research on this topic. Also, he presented the ethical considerations when doing research with sensitive data, like those used for this study.

Second Day. The morning of the second day focused on giving an overview of work done on a variety of topics related to the main topics of the seminar (through short talks from the participants).
More specifically, Zinaida Benenson (Universität Erlangen - Nürnberg, DE), described her work on spear fishing, where malicious users aim to deceive users by sending email that contain malicious URLs.
Then, Michael Sirivianos (Cyprus University of Technology - Lemesos, CY) presented his work on how to combat friend spam by analyzing the underlying network of social rejections.
The next talk was by Alexandra Olteanu (IBM TJ Watson Research Center - Yorktown Heights, US), who discussed some preliminary results on work done on hate speech.
Srijan Kumar (Stanford University, US) then showed how sockpuppet accounts are used in social networks to change and manipulate the opinions of other users of the platform.
Savvas Zannettou (Cyprus University of Technology - Lemesos, CY) presented his research on how news propagates across multiple Web communities, and how to measure their influence.
Then, Manuel Egele (Boston University, US), presented COMPA, which is a system that captures the behavioral profile of the user in order to identity possible account compromises.
Huy Kang Kim (Korea University - Seoul, KR) talked about malicious users exploiting video games to make money.
Next, Oana Goga (MPI-SWS - Saarbrucken, DE) described how online identities can be strengthen by combining multiple weak identities.
The last talk was by Julien Freudiger (Apple Computer Inc. - Cupertino, US), who covered public privacy and safety guidelines used at Apple.

The afternoon was dedicated to two parallel working groups focused on discussions around a particular topic, specifically, one was about future directions on hate speech research, and another about ethical considerations that researchers should keep in mind when working with users or user data.

Third Day. The final day of the seminar had two more parallel working groups, one on research directions related to cyberfraud in online social network, and another on algorithmic biases and possible solutions to avoid it.
We then had a discussion summarizing the work and the discussion done in the various working groups and ended up with ideas for future events, collaborations, and follow-ups.

Acknowledgments. The organizers of this workshop acknowledge research funding from the European Union's Horizon 2020 Research and Innovation programme under the Marie Sklodowska-Curie Grant Agreement No 691025.
The organizers would like to thank the Schloss Dagstuhl for the professional, productive, and enjoyable atmosphere it provides and for their invaluable support.
Finally, we are grateful to and Seda Guerses for taking notes during two of the working groups and to Savvas Zannettou for coordinating the writing of this report and taking notes throughout the seminar.

Publications

Furthermore, a comprehensive peer-reviewed collection of research papers can be published in the series Dagstuhl Follow-Ups.

Dagstuhl's Impact

Please inform us when a publication was published as a result from your seminar. These publications are listed in the category Dagstuhl's Impact and are presented on a special shelf on the ground floor of the library.